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Art
in
Japan>Contemporary
Art
1930-2004>Gallery Side 2
Original articles on art,
artists, architecture, exhibitions, galleries, museums and cultural
institutions around Tokyo, Japan.
Gallery Side 2
by John McGee

Gallery
Side 2, tucked behind Akasaka Twin Tower (Photos: John McGee)
Back in the pre-digital LP days, hit songs filled
side one of an album.
The grooves of side two were always a little different, more personal.
“You can listen passively to side one...side two you have to
decide to listen to,” says gallerist Junko Shimada, who,
deciding
it fit her style, so named her contemporary art space. Since its
founding four years ago, Gallery Side 2 has matched its moniker, not
toeing the Top-40 populist line, but pushing the progressive, indie
edge as one of the city’s best art spaces.
Shimada spent seven years in New
York City, getting her MA in art history at NYU and learning the ropes
at the top-notch 303 and Gavin Brown galleries. When she moved back to
Tokyo, her hometown, she opened shop in the basement of a Sendagaya
apartment building and jumped into the local art community. Her first
show featured the performance/video work of Yutaka Sone, a participant
in this year’s Yokohama International Triennale of
Contemporary
Art.
Taro Shinoda, 4S, 2001
Shimada is interested in artists, like
Sone, who can cross borders
or hybridize ideas. Now she works with five
Japanese
(e.g. painter Keiko Sono) and eight international artists (e.g. Thai
installation artist Rirkrit Tiravanija), a large proportion of whom are
women. Shimada says that female artists offer softer, more emotionally
inflected conceptual work. And she prefers the term “work
with” because her gallerist-artist relationships are more
than
management and representation. “I want to consider [the
gallery]
more like a home...for the artist,” Shimada says.
Earlier this year, Shimada decided to move her
space in order to meet
new people and introduce art in a more casual, just-passing-by manner.
She initially considered the Nishi-Shinjuku neighborhood
that’s
home to Wako Works of Art and Kenji Taki Gallery. But her childhood
roots and the high foot-traffic and convenience of centrally-located
Akasaka made her new big-window storefront irresistible.
Why open a
gallery on Wall Street? Akasaka may lack the hip of Omotesando and the
glitz of Ginza, but compensates with a steady flow of businesspeople
shuttling between the twin power bases of Tameike Sanno’s
high
finance and Nagatacho’s politics. “Red
slope” is also
home to the national culture body, the Japan Foundation, and its major
exhibition space, the Japan Foundation Forum. The Sendagaya basement
may have been more “side two” underground, but
street-level
Akasaka is a more shrewd crossover re-mix.
Gallerist Junko Shimada
Nevertheless, Shimada holds
true to her ideals, opening her new space with Taro Shinoda. Shinoda,
37, studied traditional
Japanese landscape design at a special high school, learning to distill
natural elements and create the infinite within limited boundaries.
When he discovered that art often sought similar results, he was
hooked. One
of his first major works, a modern, technological version of a Japanese
garden, used florescent lights moving on tracks over a pool of white
liquid.
In this show, the artist has constructed a
sculptural mobile
sound unit, a “sketch” made of parts recycled from
his piece in the Yokohama Triennale. A raucous blend of city noises
(“like a
movie
soundtrack,” says Shinoda) careens out of cardboard speaker
cabinets stacked on low carts.
_______________________________________
This exhibition was held Oct 2001 at Gallery Side
2 in Akasaka, Tokyo, Japan.
©2006 John McGee
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